User Anti-Phishing Training: How to Build a Successful Program

As spear phishing continues to be one of the top security threats, enterprises have looked to user training programs to bolster their defenses. One of the main challenges security awareness professionals face is implementing a phishing training program which shows continuous improvement and value to their organization. How do you start and build upon a training program to showcase continuous success?

The key to implementing an effective program is to focus on the biggest threats and leverage behavioral metrics to drive your program. During this webinar, Diana Garcia, Manager, Customer Onboarding and Training, will cover:

-How do you implement a phishing awareness program and run it continuously?
-What are the key elements of a successful program and what does it look like?
-How do you show the value this program and your trained users add to the security organization?

Join (ISC)² EMEA and PhishMe for a look back at 2017’s threats and a look ahead. We’ll provide an overview of what PhishMe's Intelligence team uncovered, discuss trends in phishing-delivered malware, and analyse how various delivery vectors evolved.

Some of the trends we’ll discuss:
•The implications of last year’s major global cyber-events, such as WannaCry and NotPetya
•The emergence of new ransomware families
•The abuse of legitimate functions built into business-critical software platforms to deliver malware
•The favouring of modularity and plug-in accompaniments to lightweight botnet and stealer malwares
•New ways cyber-criminals are obtaining cryptocurrency

Cyber-crime won’t slow down. Take this opportunity to learn from the recent past as you deal with current threats and prepare for whatever’s next.

Ransomware continues to be a headline grabber but where do these attacks rate compared to other cyberattacks? We look at the history of ransomware, it’s not-so-obvious impacts, and how you can prepare for the next attack in today’s 20/20 webinar.

Whether you’re just getting your program off the ground or looking to optimize your current program, this webinar will give you the knowledge you need. It’s based on proven programs involving over 27 million end users across 160 countries. Tune into to find out what others have done to reduce end-user susceptibility by 95% and build resiliency among their workforce.

Some of the topics covered include:
- Best ways to introduce and communicate a program
- Tips for increasing engagement
- Most important metrics your Board and C-level Execs will want to review
- How to handle repeat clickers

The bad news: phishing is still the #1 cyber-attack vector. The good news: new PhishMe research shows how you can go on the offensive and strengthen your resiliency to costly phishing attacks.

Join Lex Robinson, Anti-Phishing / Cyber Security Strategist, as he breaks down data from training simulations and real-life attacks to reveal how you can design a great anti-phishing program. Learn how a proactive approach conditions employees to recognize both active threats—the latest attacks that are costing organizations big-time—and “classic” threats bad actors can recycle whenever they please. See how to gain insights from incident response and phishing intelligence to keep you out in front of evolving threats. You’ll learn how to take the offensive to lower susceptibility, fortify resiliency and disrupt attacks faster.

It should come as no surprise to anyone that ransomware has become the hackers’ favored option these days. If you buy in to the scare tactics about ransomware, it’s easy to create, has a high profile in the media and can be lucrative. But like everything else in the data security world, nothing is ever as simple as it seems. This eBook (and corresponding 20/20 webcast) will look at the realities of ransomware, including the real and imagined difficulties of defending against it, the support needed on the attacker’s side to make ransomware effective and tactics victims can take to rid themselves of the malware.

During a survey recently conducted among security professionals, 90% said phishing is the #1 threat. Yet many acknowledged they’re unprepared to deal with phishing attacks.

Attend this webinar to learn why responders are drowning in emails instead of hunting real threats. See why they’re betting on automation whilst we know, tech alone won’t stop threats from getting through and wreaking serious havoc. Learn what rapid changes and investments your peers are planning to turn the tide against phishing and protect their organisations.

You will also find out:
•How bad is the phishing threat?
•How confident are companies in their phishing responses?
•What solutions are companies using—and which ones should they add?
•How can automation and technology help? Why are humans important, too?

If you’re a security professional, you understand the cyber threat to your organization and the need for an effective defense. The one big problem: your top management doesn’t. In this useful and insightful webinar, top experts offer recommendations on how to measure the cyber threat posed to your enterprise, the posture of your online defenses, and the needs and achievements of your IT security department. This webinar will bring you some new methods for describing and measuring your cybersecurity initiatives so that they can be understood by even the most business-oriented executives.

In early 2017, with the help of Gatepoint Research, PhishMe conducted a survey of select IT executives themed “Phishing Response Strategies”. The participants represent a wide variety of industries including business services, high tech, healthcare, financial services, and more. Survey participants were asked important questions about their current phishing response strategies’ strengths and weaknesses, as well as the current state of their phishing response programs.

Join PhishMe and Simply Direct for an in-depth review of responses to this survey and discover answers to current challenges relating to Phishing Incident Response in today’s organizations.

Agenda:
What are the current strategies for detecting and managing phishing attacks?
What technologies are currently deployed or in process?
What capabilities would most enhance the phishing management process?

Ransomware campaigns continue to evolve. Organizations can defend their business with intelligence that uncovers the tactics attackers are leveraging to inflict harm. At the same time, your employees are a valuable resource in defending against ransomware and provide security teams with useful information to take proactive measures. Security leaders and their teams are challenged with doing more with less. Integrated solutions and automation to fight ransomware enables analysts to be more efficient and accurate in the operation.

Join PhishMe and Recorded Future as they uncover the latest ransomware campaigns and how employees and analysts play an important role in defending the enterprise.

Agenda:
• What are researchers and other companies seeing as part of the threat landscape?
• What can teams do to protect and respond and what resources do you need to prepare?
• What are the benefits of integrating tools together and how can this help you?

No matter how quickly you’re detecting and responding to breaches, it’s still not fast enough for your customers’ and clients’ peace of mind. Even companies with the best solution in place are only doing half the job. The other half? Training your people.

The average time to find and respond to a breach?
147 days. (That’s not a typo.)

So, how do you get your organization better – and faster? And how do you train and empower your employees to do better than 147 days? In this presentation, we will explore how to harness the common detection techniques used by prairie dogs (yes, prairie dogs) and lessons we can learn from them in the domain of cyber security. HINT? It’s called Collective Security.

Prairie dog calls contain specific information as to what the predator is, how big it is and how fast it is approaching.
- Slobodchikoff, C. N. (2002), Cognition and Communication in Prairie Dogs

With phishing attacks accounting for over 90% of all breaches and the cost of cybercrime rising, is your company doing all it can to prevent a phishing attack and costly breach?

The results are in and PhishMe’s suite of anti-phishing solutions can help protect you against attacks. Forrester Consulting has analyzed the Total Economic Impact (TEI) of implementing PhishMe’s Human Phishing Defense Solutions and the results are outstanding!

In 2016, the PhishMe Intelligence team saw over 2,500 active threat reports, the widespread implementation of anti-analysis methods, a notable evolution in techniques and tools to deliver malware, and the growing threat of encryption ransomware.

Now more than ever, it has become more important to detect and interdict malware during the delivery phase. What can you do to defend your environment? What will threat actors do to step things up in 2017?

Join Brendan Griffin, to learn about:

•The evolution of malware and encrypted ransomware
•2016’s most prevalent threats
•Identifying the latest malware delivery tools and techniques
•Developing a modern defense strategy and empowering your users
•What to look out for in 2017

Join PhishMe as we look back on the top attacks and explore how to use a combination of Human and Technology to stop phishing attempts before they progress to a breach. In this presentation, we will cover:
- The big phishes of 2016 and what to look out for in 2017
- Why good employees click on bad emails – the emotional and situational triggers
- How engagement can decrease susceptibility
- How IR teams can stay on top of attacks in progress

During the third quarter of 2016, the PhishMe Intelligence team generated 689 active threat reports that highlighted indicators of compromise, tactics, and techniques that serve as the hallmarks of phishing attacks. Two key stories stood out this quarter. Locky continued to steal headlines as the dominant ransomware by continuing to innovate and avoid detection by experts. Meanwhile, other, quieter malware remained an ever-present threat to companies of all sizes. Join Brendan Griffin, Threat Intelligence Manager, PhishMe to learn about:

With all the attention paid to the technological sophistication of cyber attacks, as well as to the new technologies arising to strengthen defense, one fact often gets overlooked: Security is fundamentally about people.

The adversary is an intelligent actor – while the target is often human as well. The compromise of sensitive information or functionality may be in the crosshairs, but it’s people that are often targeted to gain a foothold inside the victim organization, through techniques such as phishing or social engineering. But here’s the secret: In this targeting lies one of the most unsuspected – but potentially rich – assets to defense an organization can have.

In this webcast, Scott Crawford, Research Director of Information Security for 451 Research, and Allan Carey, Vice President of Business Development from PhishMe take a closer look at:

•How the targeting of people through phishing, impersonation attacks and social engineering can be leveraged to improve security and resistance to attack
•New tactics and tools that make the most of human engagement to defend organizations against these exploits
•Ways to enhance incident response by incorporating human interactions with malicious activity into the evidence chain

Phishing (including spear phishing), persists as the #1 attack vector used by hackers today. So far in 2016, spear-phishing attacks are up 55%, Ransomware attacks are up 4X and Business Email Compromise (BEC) losses are up 1300%.

PhishMe analyzed customer responses to over 56 million simulated phishing emails sent between 2015-2016 to identify various phishing susceptibility trends amongst employees. Join John “Lex” Robinson, Principal Client Engagement Manager to learn more about –

· Emotional motivators that cause employees to be more susceptible to phishing emails

Email remains an essential tool for business communication and collaboration as well as customer engagement. Because of its pervasiveness and business importance, it is a common – even preferred – attack vector for both cybercriminals and fraudsters that can result in devastating breaches and other financial losses. Yet, security teams can leverage the data from email to enhance their ability to detect, analyze, and respond to critical email security incidents, as well as leverage the threat intelligence for other security technologies.

In this webinar, former Forrester Analyst Kelley Mak will join Scott Greaux from PhishMe to:
•Provide an overview of today's email security challenges across on-premise and hosted cloud email deployments
•Discuss the need for in-depth email incident response capabilities, including internal and external threat analysis, prioritization, and rapid response
•Provide recommendations on how security teams can refine the email events in their enterprise into valuable threat intelligence

During the second quarter of 2016, ransomware has firmly established itself as a mature business model, showing no outward signs of diminishing. Encryption ransomware now accounts for 50% of all malware delivery configurations, meaning that it is no longer considered simply a means for making a quick profit, but a permanent fixture on the threat landscape.
This webcast will discuss how ransomware has now become a successful business and reveals findings on the use of steganography and ciphers in malware delivery. Join Brendan Griffin, Threat Intelligence Manager, PhishMe to learn about:
•Encryption Ransomware
•Rise in Evasion Techniques
•How simple attacks can still inflict massive harm

For too long the human element has been wildly underutilized in protecting valuable assets and defending against prolific cyber-attacks. Security awareness initiatives are often sporadic, employing uninspired materials that yield little to no results – ultimately rendering security technologies useless due to easily avoidable human mistakes. A continued focus on security awareness alone is a plan doomed to fail. Instead, by shifting our focus to conditioning workforce behaviors through immersive experiences, security best practices become ingrained in daily workflow, helping to not only recognize and report on attack attempts, but weaponizing human intelligence to assist security operations, incident response and security event management in eliminating phishing threats.

Join guest speaker Nick Hayes, security analyst at Forrester Research, and Rohyt Belani, CEO and co-founder of PhishMe, as they demonstrate how building the right defense programs and teams can effectively change security culture, evolving from awareness to sophisticated strategies that achieve real results. In this webinar, you’ll learn:

•Why security awareness alone is failing the enterprise
•How to unlock the power of human driven intelligence
•Tips on speeding incident response

Even with all your processes and technology in place, phishing attacks containing ransomware and other malware continue to penetrate your defenses. With 91% of all attacks on enterprise networks being the result of successful phishing attempts, organizations need an efficient and effective phishing incident response plan.

Cofense, formerly PhishMe, is the leading provider of human-driven phishing defense solutions worldwide. We deliver a collaborative approach to cybersecurity by enabling organization-wide engagement to active email threats. Our collective defense suite combines best-in class incident response technologies with timely attack intelligence sourced from employees. From driving awareness to security automation and orchestration, our solutions are designed to anticipate and disrupt the attack kill chain at delivery to quickly mitigate the impacts from spear phishing, ransomware, malware, and business email compromise. Today, this is all made real for thousands of global organizations. Learn more at www.cofense.com.